Zoom in on the Apollo landing sites. Let's see of there's a moon buggy there or if NASA lied!

Quoting: Anonymous Coward 14093935

I'm afraid neither this telescope nor any other telescope on earth has the angular resolution necessary to resolve any of the apollo hardware. Not even hubble. Every pixel you see here represents about 1 mile on the moon. That's about as good as I can resolve it. Hubble can resolve closer to football field sized objects, which is still far bigger than any apollo hardware. Only the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter can directly resolve the Apollo hardware, and it has.

I was going to do this on Saturday night, but the weather conspired against me. Here's the link to the stream, I'm just about to start broadcasting the moon. In the meantime you can see what the telescope and moon look like from a standard camcorder: [link to justin.tv]

I was going to do this on Saturday night, but the weather conspired against me. Here's the link to the stream, I'm just about to start broadcasting the moon. In the meantime you can see what the telescope and moon look like from a standard camcorder: [link to justin.tv]

I was going to do this on Saturday night, but the weather conspired against me. Here's the link to the stream, I'm just about to start broadcasting the moon. In the meantime you can see what the telescope and moon look like from a standard camcorder: [link to justin.tv]

I was going to do this on Saturday night, but the weather conspired against me. Here's the link to the stream, I'm just about to start broadcasting the moon. In the meantime you can see what the telescope and moon look like from a standard camcorder: [link to justin.tv]